News and Events => Political and Legal News => Topic started by: Jessica_Rose on January 22, 2026, 07:39:31 PM Return to Full Version
Title: Federal judge slams DOJ’s attempt to “intimidate & harass” trans patients...
Post by: Jessica_Rose on January 22, 2026, 07:39:31 PM
Post by: Jessica_Rose on January 22, 2026, 07:39:31 PM
Federal judge slams DOJ's attempt to "intimidate & harass" trans patients & hospitals
https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2026/01/federal-judge-slams-dojs-attempt-to-intimidate-harass-trans-patients-hospitals/
Daniel Villarreal (22 Jan 2026)
A federal judge has voided a Department of Justice (DOJ) subpoena requiring Children's National Hospital in Washington, D.C. to hand over private information on young patients receiving gender-affirming care (GAC). The ruling is just the latest roadblock in the DOJ's quest to end GAC for trans youth; however, the hospital stopped offering GAC last July in response to the current presidential administration's threats to defund institutions that offer such care.
The case involved eight families that received transition-related healthcare through the hospital's Gender Development Program between 2020 and 2025. The families said that the DOJ's subpoena — which demanded their addresses, children's social security number, medical diagnoses, prescriptions, and all documents affirming parental authorization, among other information — violated their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, and their Fifth Amendment right to privacy in their medical records.
The DOJ argued that the families lacked legal standing to oppose the subpoena because none of them directly received it — the subpoena was sent to hospital workers — and because the families challenged the subpoena after the DOJ's deadline for patient information had passed.
But, because the subpoena sought "private medical records containing highly sensitive treatment" about children, U.S. District Judge Julie R. Rubin wrote in her ruling that the families had legal standing, both because the subpoena put an "undue burden" upon the families and because their children were relying on their parental guardians "to protect [their] interests because [they lack legal] capacity to act in self-protection."
https://www.lgbtqnation.com/2026/01/federal-judge-slams-dojs-attempt-to-intimidate-harass-trans-patients-hospitals/
Daniel Villarreal (22 Jan 2026)
A federal judge has voided a Department of Justice (DOJ) subpoena requiring Children's National Hospital in Washington, D.C. to hand over private information on young patients receiving gender-affirming care (GAC). The ruling is just the latest roadblock in the DOJ's quest to end GAC for trans youth; however, the hospital stopped offering GAC last July in response to the current presidential administration's threats to defund institutions that offer such care.
The case involved eight families that received transition-related healthcare through the hospital's Gender Development Program between 2020 and 2025. The families said that the DOJ's subpoena — which demanded their addresses, children's social security number, medical diagnoses, prescriptions, and all documents affirming parental authorization, among other information — violated their Fourth Amendment right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure, and their Fifth Amendment right to privacy in their medical records.
The DOJ argued that the families lacked legal standing to oppose the subpoena because none of them directly received it — the subpoena was sent to hospital workers — and because the families challenged the subpoena after the DOJ's deadline for patient information had passed.
But, because the subpoena sought "private medical records containing highly sensitive treatment" about children, U.S. District Judge Julie R. Rubin wrote in her ruling that the families had legal standing, both because the subpoena put an "undue burden" upon the families and because their children were relying on their parental guardians "to protect [their] interests because [they lack legal] capacity to act in self-protection."